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Determinants of health … through the lens of behavior

Determinants of health … through the lens of behavior. Integration of Population Health Inquiry and Transformation (IPHIT) in Family Medicine Northeast Education Afternoon October 23, 2013. Objectives.

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Determinants of health … through the lens of behavior

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  1. Determinants of health …through the lens of behavior Integration of Population Health Inquiry and Transformation (IPHIT) in Family Medicine Northeast Education Afternoon October 23, 2013

  2. Objectives • Discuss the role of population-level health determinants on health status and care of individuals and populations • Provide a focus of behavior as an example of an important biologic determinant • Review Northeast data around tobacco, obesity, and chronic pain

  3. Importance of Health Determinants “Common diseases have roots in lifestyle, social factors and environment, and successful health promotion depends upon a population-based strategy of prevention.” Rose 1992

  4. Importance of Health Determinants • Our training and reimbursement systems emphasize diagnostic and treatment services to individuals. • Can we change our focus to those factors (DETERMINANTS) which have the most influence on the health of the population? Rose 1992

  5. Importance of Health Determinants • What are the 3 classic health determinants? • Environment • Social • Biology • Current attempts at health reform will not be successful at improving health unless the population health determinants are addressed.

  6. Determinants of Health Novick, LF. Used with permission.

  7. Contemporary Concept of Health

  8. Life Expectancy in Years by Country at Birth (2009 est.)

  9. Adapted from McGinnis JM, Williams-Russo P, Knichman JR. The case for more active policy attention to health promotion. Health Aff (Millwood) 2002;21(2):78-93.

  10. HIV Example • A contemporary example of the agent-host-environment model can be seen with the transmission of HIV in a community, which is determined by: • infectious agent • host individuals • social environment • The agent-host-environment model facilitates public health intervention because disease can be interdicted by addressing any one of these factors

  11. Occurrence • Environment Information Education Peer norms Drug use Condom availability Sexual behaviors Condom utilization Multiple partners Intravenous drug use • Individual Agent Prevention Partner notification/ Needle exchange/ Safe sex/ Condoms Used with permission.

  12. A closer look Biology: Behavior Social: Income

  13. Behavior • Modifiable behavioral risk factors are leading causes of mortality in the United States. • Behavioral factors largely determine the patterns of disease and mortality of the twentieth-century populations of the United States. Mokdad et al. 2004 US Department of health, Education and Welfare, Breslow 1998

  14. 1900: Ten Leading Causes of Death per 100,000 persons 2007: Ten Leading Causes of Death per 100,000 persons Adapted from the MMWR Vol. 48, no. 29, 1999 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and 2007 data from the National Center for Health Statistics

  15. Used with permission, Mokdad et al. 2004

  16. Smoking and Obesity • Although there is still much to do in tobacco control, it is nevertheless touted as a model for combating obesity, the other major, potentially preventable cause of death and disability in the United States. • Smoking and obesity share many characteristics. Schroeder 2007

  17. Smoking and Obesity • are highly prevalent • start in childhood or adolescence • were relatively uncommon until the first (smoking) or second (obesity) half of the 20th century • are major risk factors for chronic disease • involve intensively marketed products • are more common in low socioeconomic classes • exhibit major regional variations (with higher rates in southern and poorer states) • carry a stigma • are difficult to treat • are less enthusiastically embraced by clinicians than other risk factors for medical conditions Schroeder 2007

  18. Fifth Phase of the Epidemiologic Transition • 1st phase: Age of Pestilence and Famine (most of human history) • 2nd phase: Age of Receding Pandemics (late 19th, early 20th century) • 3rd phase: Age of Degenerative and Human-Made Diseases (mid-20th century) • 4th phase: Age of delayed degenerative diseases (mid 1960s) • 5th phase: Age of Obesity and Inactivity (21st century) Gaziano 2010

  19. Fifth Phase of the Epidemiologic Transition • The latest prevalence and trends in obesity data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), reported by Flegal and colleagues, show that in 2007-2008, 68.0% of US adults were overweight, of whom 33.8% were obese. • Early obesity strongly predicts later cardiovascular disease, and excess weight may explain the dramatic increase in type 2 diabetes, a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease. Gaziano 2010

  20. Fifth Phase of the Epidemiologic Transition • The longer the delay in taking aggressive action, the higher the likelihood that the significant progress achieved in decreasing chronic disease rates during the last 40 years will be negated (e.g. reversing the net benefit that declining smoking rates have had), possibly even with a decrease in life expectancy. Gaziano 2010

  21. Income & Health • People of lower socioeconomic status are more likely to die prematurely than are people of higher socioeconomic status, even when behavior is held as constant as possible.

  22. Socioeconomic Factors and Disparity • Life expectancy appears to be more related to income inequalities than to average income or wealth. • In a study of the relationship between total and cause-specific mortality with income distribution for households of the United States, a Robin Hood index measuring inequality was calculated and found to be strongly associated with infant mortality, coronary heart disease, malignant neoplasms, and homicide. Wilkinson 1989, Kennedy et al. 1996

  23. Top diagnoses at UW-Madison Family Medicine Residency clinics

  24. Insurance status and Obesity and AODA diagnoses

  25. Population Based Prevention • Because of the broad distribution of most diseases and health determinants, using a population as an organizing principle for preventive action has the potential to have a great impact on the entire population’s health. • It takes partnering at all levels to fully realize the impact of any health intervention.

  26. What is Healthy People? • National agenda that communicates a vision and overarching goals, supported by topic areas and specific objectives for improving the population’s health and achieving health equity. Slade-Sawyer, P, HHS Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

  27. Evolution of Healthy People *39 Topic areas with objectives Slade-Sawyer, P, HHS Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

  28. Slade-Sawyer, P, HHS Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

  29. Healthy People 2020: Framework • Mission—Healthy People 2020 strives to: • Identify nationwide health improvement priorities • Increase public awareness and understanding of the determinants of health, disease, and disability and the opportunities for progress • Provide measurable objectives and goals that are applicable at the national, state, and local levels • Engage multiple sectors to take actions to strengthen policies and improve practices that are driven by the best available evidence and knowledge • Identify critical research, evaluation, and data collection needs. Slade-Sawyer, P, HHS Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion

  30. References • Association for Prevention Teaching and Research (APTR): Module 1 Determinants of Health • Northeast data provided by Wen-Jan Tuan

  31. OTHEr top diagnoses Treating chronic pain

  32. Top diseases at Northeast

  33. Who sees chronic pain patients at NE?

  34. Questions?

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